Furthermore, the Raptors should retire VC's jersey because of the immense impact he had on Toronto and on Canada as a whole. The Raptors have never had as much success as they did between '99 and '02, but VC inspired a generation of Canadians to start playing basketball, and really helped make Toronto love the sport.

If we do end up with Wiggins, I can't think of a more suitable veteran mentor than Vince. We should definitely bring him back so that he can end his career in the place it truly started in, and so that he can be that veteran presence for our team going into the future.

“You can sink and drown, or you can float, and we out here like Michael Phelps."

Why should I have to 'make up' with a person who screwed me over and never in any way shape or form apologized for it let alone showed any remorse. Sure maybe some good catholics would do that... but I'm not catholic.

Because I can forgive doesn't mean I'm gonna forget.

I think its actually rather degrading to have the first Raptor HoFer (if it even happens ofcourse) or retired jersey (as others have mentioned in the past) be of a guy who didn't want to play here any more, quit on the team, demanded a trade, and generally butt f*cked the organization. If nothing else its just a matter of respect.

Management's role is fielding a competitive team around him. They let things fall apart. They decided to rebuild while he was still there and he didn't want to go through a rebuild.

Although your right, as a franchise player of a team you disrespect the whole city by not trying anymore as a raptor. He has admitted in a documentary that in his final years in T.O he didn't care and wasn't trying at all. I understand management didn't put the right team around him and he wanted to leave and I don't blame him for leaving but the way he handled the situation was flat out B.S

Management's role is fielding a competitive team around him. They let things fall apart. They decided to rebuild while he was still there and he didn't want to go through a rebuild.

Wanting to be traded because the team was rebuilding is one thing. Quitting on the team is another. It's actually disappointing to me that the HOF would honor a guy that completely dropped the ball on an organization like VC did.

If he wants to go in as a Raptor, fine, I think it should be the player's choice. But is he really a HOF player? No first team all-NBA selections (one second-team and one third-team), no deep playoff runs either as a leader or as a roleplayer, and obviously no finals appearances or championships.
On the other side, he holds a bunch of franchise records (with a couple non-impressive franchises). Had a lot of all-star appearances. Had a good run of 20ppg seasons (probably his most impressive achievement). Had a brilliant playoff game once. Had one of the best slam-dunk competition performances of all time.

He was a very, very good player in his prime. But I'm really on the fence of whether that's HoF worthy. You take away some very impressive highlights (the slam dunk championship, jumping over a guy in the Olympics, the 50pt playoff game in a series they lost), and it's not a great resume. If they want to factor in popularity, then yes, definitely, he deserves to be in, he was at his peak one of the most exciting and popular players ever. But that's not criteria I'd use.

I like contrasting the comments in another thread about how KD "likes" the Raptors, 100% of the credit for which is due to Vincent Lamar Carter, with the undying Vince-hate here.

I'm way over how Vince quit. It was dumb - no need to defend it - but he was young. He made a mistake and showed poor judgment. Whoop dee do. Newsflash - multimillionaires in their 20's don't always make the best big-picture decisions. Also, the sun is on fire and water is wet. Anything else we need to know? The Vince years were great for Raptors fans, and we've been nowhere near that "peak" before or since.